Author
Ibn Qudamah, Abdullah bin Ahmed Muwaffaq al-Din Abu Muhammad al-Maqdisi, 620 AH/1223 AD.
Author Original
ابن قدامة، عبد الله بن أحمد موفق الدين أبو محمد المقدسي، هـم
Publication Date
Not available
Publication Place
Damascus - Syria -
Not identified
Subject
Hadith.
Type
kitap
Language
Arabic
Digital
Yes
Manuscript
Yes
Pages Count
25
Library
Al-Furqan Islamic Heritage Foundation
Library Asset ID
مجموع 85
Record ID
156566
Library Location
Syria (Damascus) - Dar Al-Kutob Al-Dhahiria Library - Syria (Damascus) - Dar Al-Kutob Al-Dhahiria Library
Date
Not available
Notes
The author is one of the most eminent imams. He was born in 541. There is no inscription on this volume indicating his name or the name of its author, and we have inferred that it has the names of his sheikhs through whom he narrated the hadiths of the book. Their number is twenty people, including his son Issa. He said (171/2): My son Abu Al-Majd Issa bin Abdullah told me. Here are the names of his sheikhs referred to: 1- Ahmad ibn al-Muqarrab ibn al-Husayn al-Karkhi Abu Bakr (trustworthiness 480 _ 563) 2- Muhammad ibn Abd al-Baqi Ahmad ibn Salman Abu al-Fath [477 _ 564] (We benefited from “Al-Sir” 20/481). 3- Abdullah bin Muhammad bin Ahmed bin Al-Naqur Abu Bakr Al-Bazzaz (trustworthy hadith narrator Awlad Al-Shuyoukh 483 _ 565). 4- Fatima bint Muhammad bin Ali Al-Bazzaza, known as Nafisa [... _ 536] (We benefited from it from “Al-Sir” 20/489). 5- Ahmed bin Ahmed bin Muhammad bin Hamdi Abu Al-Muzaffar. 6- Abdullah bin Mansour bin Hibat Allah al-Mawsili Abu Muhammad [487 _ 567] (We benefited from him from “Al-Shadharat” 4/222, and “Al-Ibar” 4/197) 7- Abdullah bin Abdul Rahman bin Ahmed bin Saber Al-Sulami Abu Al-Ma’ali [499 _ 576] (We benefited from him from “Al-Sir” 21/ 93). 8- Abu Al-Fath [Ibn Al-Munni, who is Nasr bin Futyan Al-Hanbali (501 _ 583)] (We benefited from him from “Al-Sir” 21/137), and “Al-Taridh” (1/650). 9- Yahya bin Asad bin Bush Abu Al-Qasim (he heard a lot and was a Hanbali, common man, 506-593). 10- Abu Abdullah bin Sadaqa Al-Harrani. 11- Al-Khalil bin Abi Al-Raja bin Abi Al-Fath Al-Rarani Abu Saeed (singularity, unique to several parts, 500-596). [Rarani has two open bara’s, each one is followed by an alif. After the second thousand, there is a broken nun, named after (Raran), one of the villages of Isfahan. This was said by Ibn Nasser in “Al-Taridh” (4/85-86). 12- Tahir bin Muhammad bin Tahir al-Maqdisi Abu Zur’ah (Hafiz, 481 _ 566). 13- Muhammad bin Muhammad bin Mawahib Al-Khorasani, the chief writer Abu Al-Izz (his mind changed shortly before his death 494-576). 14- Abu Al-Faraj Yahya bin Mahmoud Al-Thaqafi (narrated Al-Kathir 514-584). 15- Ahmed bin Al-Mubarak bin Saad Abu Al-Abbas Al-Marqaani. (He used to spread out the patchwork for Sheikh Abdul Qadir on the chair... _ 570) 16- His son Issa bin Abdullah Abu Al Majd. 17- Al-Qasim bin Al-Fadl bin Abdul-Wahid Al-Saidlani Abu Al-Mutahhar (after 470 _ 567). [The date of his birth is also mentioned in “Al-Sir” (20/528)] 18- Ali bin Asakir bin Al-Marhab Al-Batahi Al-Muqri Abu Al-Hassan. (Imam in the Sunnah, 490-572). [The date of his birth is also mentioned in “Al-Sir” (20/548) and (22/166)]. 19- Al-Hassan bin Salama bin Muhammad Al-Harrani Abu Ali. 20- Abdullah bin Ahmed bin Muhammad bin Abdul Qahir al-Tusi Abu al-Fadl (trustworthy, 487 _ 578). Then I confirmed this when I found that Al-Hafiz Al-Dhahabi had narrated in his book “Al-Ulwul li Al-Ali Al-Ghaffar” (p. 102) a hadith proving the supremacy of God Almighty through Ibn Qudamah with his chain of transmission to Ma’bad bin Ka’b bin Malik, and it is in this book of Ibn Qudamah with the same chain of narration and text that Al-Dhahabi narrated from him, and it is in our manuscript (Q. 161/2). Then I saw Al-Dhahabi narrating in another place (113) another hadith, and he called his book “The Book of Proving the Attribute of Highness.” To God” and this is close to the name that I put in my own inference, and praise be to God for His success. It was also mentioned by Ibn al-Qayyim in “The Islamic Armies,” p. 72). Then I saw Sheikh Yusuf bin Abdul Hadi in his “Index” (2/34) attributing this book from this collection to Ibn Salamah, and in another place (41/1) he called it “Proving the Elevation by Ibn Salama” and attributed it to another collection that is still preserved - thank God - in the library under No. (16), but they were misleading in attributing it to it, as what is contained in it is “The Ismaili Belief” (Q. 83 - 44), and Ibn Salama I do not know who meant this, and other books have attributed to it (Q. 19/2 and 41/1). God knows best.
Durum
مجلد ناقص الأول والآخر.